I understand you must believe this, nevertheless, the historical documents prove that it is just not true. – the RCC did in fact change its teaching on this matter. The last thing anyone needs is for a church claiming “infallibility” to teach that belief in the Lord Jesus Christ is optional.
This statement seem to thoroughly contradict your entire presentation thus far. As framed, it also appears to lack the basics of soteriology.
Dear Kelman,
Thankyou for the above. This must, alas, be my final posting as Christmas is but a short time away now.
To conclude our discussion, I would like to respond again to your contention that the Catholic Church has changed it teaching regarding the salvablity of non-Christians.
The words, the wideness of God’s mercy, have continually sprang to mind during our discussions together and I think that this is what we need to grasp in this whole issue if we are not to risk devaluing the Sacrifice of our Blessed Saviour. Please do not misunderstand me, dear friend, I do not question the the truth of the passages from Sacred Scripture that you cite, which insist upon repentance towards God and faith towards our Lord Jesus Christ - a hearty amen to all that sort of thing - but I would, along with many Protestant Christians, past and present, maintain that these can only relalisticly apply to those who have come under the joyful sound of the Glad Tidings, as the great Dr. Arnold held. Our understanding of the character of God forbids us from holding that the men of sincere good will in the non-Christian religions, will be consigned to eternal damnation, simply because they have not had opportunity to make a conscious response to a Gospel or a Christ of which they have never heard. These men are ignorant of the Gospel and claims of the Church through no deliberate fault of their own and are therefore invincibly ignorant. Now the wideness of God’s mercy demands that we make allowance for this grave disadvantage, especially since some have been bred in an atmosphere of prejudice and superstition. However, notwithstanding, many of them have strived to live up to the light they have received, have sought after truth, have been devout God-fearers (like Cornelius, prior to his conversion) and have lived lives by no means barren as regards good works. To say by way of reply that these men are condemned for being sinners and not ignorance of the Gospel, is not really very helplful for everyone is a sinner in the sight of God and worthy of death, as you have pointed out from St. Paul. Even so, some ‘sinners’ who are unaware of the Gospel, do strive to be good people and do good to their fellow men. We say that God cannot and does not ignore this and can save such men, if they are inculpably ignorant, due circumstances of birth and upbringing.
The fact is that, notwithstanding the modern channels of communication such as the interweb, the vast majority of mankind never have a chance to learn about God as we Christians know God, or to hear about Sacred Scripture and Jesus Christ. Even if they do hear of these things it is not infrequently through the distorted lenes of prejudice and defective thinking. Can we really argue that such men are condemned to Hell?
With the discoveries of new regions and conntinents, with their billions of pagans, however, the landscape changed literally. For this reason and others, the Church gradually came to realize that, unless the salvation that Christ set out to achieve was a failure for most of mankind, then the Holy Spirit must be at work in ways that we have not heretofore thought of. Jesus Christ is , we firmly believe and truly, the source and fulfillment of all salvific work; any man anywhere,
anytime, is only saved through and in Him and through His Holy Catholic Church. However, if that salvation is truly at work in the whole world, then faith in Christ, and in the heavenly Father whose wonderful love He revealed, must surely be possible in ways other than explicit, conscious acts of “accepting Him as personal Saviour”. That is what B. Pope John Paul II, the Catechism, Council documents and other Catholic sources mean when they speak about the possibility of salvation outside of the borders of the Church.
Catholics believe the possibility of salvation, the possibility of coming under the influence of the Holy Spirit’s movements inspiring faith in Jesus Christ, is available to all men, not merely a priviliged few who happen to live in the right place and the right time, where the Evangel can be formally preached unto them.
Dear brother, I do not suppose that I will cause you to have a change of heart on this matter or that you will revise your thinking this side of Christmas, but we need, all of us, to be careful about presuming to put limits on what the Almighty can do. Can I ask kelman that you at least ponder on what I have said in this post and my previous ones, and what my fellow Catholics have said in this thread also, even if at present you just cannot agree with our postion.
It only remains for me now to bid you farewell and thank you for a very charitable debate and I hope we can discuss another topic at another time in another thread. May I take this opportunity to wish you a very Blessed Christmas and may Jesus be the cheer of this Holy Season.
God bless you, my friend, until our paths cross again.
Warmest good wishes,
Portrait:tiphat:
Pax